Thursday, September 13, 2012

Before I make the call, meet the client,
give the pitch, show my wares and ask for the order, my chief weapon is
the convincing of myself. The internal monologue that inspires me, down to my
bones, to believe in who I am and the value I deliver.

And it’s not just the first sale, it’s also the hardest and
the most important one. But we can close that sale consistently if we keeping
asking ourselves one question:

How sold am I on my
own brand?

If we don’t think what we’re selling is the greatest thing
that ever was, we’re finished. If we don’t think our work matters in a massive
way, we’re toast. And if we don’t think our ideas are going to change people’s
lives forever, we’re done.

I met a guy last week who had just changed sales jobs. When
I asked what prompted the move, he said it’s because he no longer believed in
the company he worked for. They weren’t bad people or anything, he just outgrew
their mission and was ready to move on. And he didn’t want to stay any longer because
it wouldn’t have been fair to the organization.

So he got a new gig working for
himself, a brand that Mark had no trouble believing in. And when I asked how
the new job was going, it’s no surprise that his sales numbers were through the
roof.

Because he was sold on his own brand. And he kept making
that sale, every day.

Sell and resell yourself on you, and the customer will buy
and rebuy from you.